<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><item href="/anthropology/anthropologists-in-other-departments/steven-friedson-phd.html" dsn="people"><first_name>Steven</first_name><last_name>Friedson</last_name><prefixes/><pronouns/><post_nominals>Ph.D.</post_nominals><title-1>Professor - Music Theory, History and Ethnomusicology</title-1><title-2/><title-3/><title-4/><department/><type/><email>steven.friedson@unt.edu</email><phone>(940) 369-7541</phone><image><img src="/anthropology/images/anthropology.unt.edu/files/images/faculty/photos/friedson-steven_.jpg" alt="Steven Friedson"/></image><office>Music Building 313</office><address/><office-hours/><types/><departments/><main-content>Steven Friedson is University Distinguished Research Professor of Music and Anthropology and head of the ethnomusicology program.
A graduate of the University of Washington, Professor Freidson conducted research in Malawi under the auspices of a Fulbright grant. For the past fifteen years he has been working in the Volta Region of Ghana, where he has established a research center on the Guinea Coast. He is author of Dancing Prophets Musical Experience in Tumbuka Healing(University of Chicago Press 1996), and Remains of Ritual: Northern Gods in a Southern Land (University of Chicago Press 2009), winner of the Alan P. Merriam Prize for Outstanding Book in Ethnomusicology. He is currently working on the final book of a trilogy on music and ritual. In a previous life he was a member of the 60s rock band the Kingsmen.</main-content></item><!-- Migrated using XML Migration 2024-04-16 15:49:43 -->